Sunday, May 31, 2009

New graduates


We had an exam on May 29 and have some new graduates to announce. Peter Galvano will be moving to second degree black, Wendy Pollack to first brown, Deb Fick to second brown and Matt Walk to third brown. Others in the photo donated their bodies to science.
It was the first step-exam in our new studio and we had it the night before our grand opening ceremony.

Our Grand Opening



People piled in the door at our new facility Saturday to be a part of our grand opening. We had sample classes, gave away some prizes, cut the ribbon, raised the American flag and had refreshments.



Kevin Coykendall (Filipino Martial Arts) kicked off the classes at 10am with his joint lock class.

I followed with an intro on Parker Kenpo. Peter Annazone (Russian Martial Art) taught right after me with a well-received session on basic theory of Systema. The kids jumped into Genie Byrd's youth Kenpo class.




We had a ribbon cutting at about 11:30 with all the instructors at the ribbon and Peter, Kevin and myself sliced it with knives used in the three systems. Then Ft. Myers firefighter/paramedic Bill Damewood, also a kenpo black belt, placed the American flag in the new studio for the first time.


After a short break the day was finished with a boxing class by Ed Cabrera from Tampa. Ed's class was the biggest of the day with about 20 people on the mat with him. Ed's classes are always well-received and we appreciate him driving all the way down to work with our people.

We had a lot of old faces show up and many new people interested in our programs. If we have a problem with our studio it's that we have four great programs and it's tough for people to decide which one to take (although we do offer cross-training programs).


The event was a success, and I thank everyone who came by. Special thanks to Jan and Mary who ran the behind-the-scenes stuff, and to my students who presented me with a bouquet of roses at the ribbon cut. Thanks so much.


More pictures on my site in the photo gallery.

Kenpo photos

Sofia Paunovic in Sweden is a professional photographer and second degree Kenpo black belt. You can see many of her camp photos from various events, including the recent Wonder Valley event here www.mffoto.se/blackbelt

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Another Wonder Valley success

The Memorial Day weekend camp hosted by Graham and Jaydean Lelliott at Wonder Valley, California was a success. This is the third time I've been asked to teach and each time I have a blast. Many of our European kenpo people came over for the camp with Sweden, England, Jersey and Spain represented.
The instructor staff consisted of myself, Graham, Dian Tanaka-Whitson, Marty Zaninovich, Willy Aguilar (with England's Diane Wheeler and Doctor Nigel at left), Bryan Hawkins, Ingmar Johansson and Ed Parker Jr. I was able to sit in on several of the sessions. Many of the classes were held outdoors in the perfect California weather. The subjects ran the gamut from kids classes to stick and knife, grafting, buckles, joint locks, advanced concepts and more.
I was, as always, impressed with Marty Zaninovich. His content and presentation are top-notch. Marty is now an instructor at the famed Inosanto Academy, too. Dian Tanaka pushed home a point I like, which is to insure that you know the delivery is correct on knife and club attacks, which helps both attacker and defender.
The weekend is a mix of activities with seminars, challenge games, rope courses, and social activity. The Saturday night dinner music was provided by Kenpo black belt Harry Troupe from Maui, Hawaii. This guy can play a guitar! He had some people with tears in their eyes.
A big congrats and a thank you to the Lelliotts and their team for pulling off another great event. You can see a slide show by Amy Long at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oK8jWP_upkI
Two trash-talking black belts duke it out at the Friday night dinner! Caught on video!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xp1FmPVblaQ
For some more insanity connected with the camp, see this video of myself and Graham in sumo outfits doing Short One and Two Man Set.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZydXy2b3UY

Monday, May 18, 2009

Chicago seminars

Once again, we had a great time back in the old stomping grounds of Chicago. Both seminars were well-attended, with Sensei "Wojo" and his black belts attending the contact manipulation class alongside our own people.

I had the honor to promote my long-time friend and student Kurt Barnhart to sixth degree black. Kurt has been in the arts since 1967 and has studied with me since I opened my first school in Palos Hills in 1976, being one of the first in the door there. (Chicago boys; look carefully and you'll see "Da Chief" looking on.)

Kurt and I met Mr. Tom Saviano of the White Tiger school for lunch on Friday. Tom is John McSweeney's highest ranking student and carries the flame at his school in Addison, IL. I hadn't seen Tom in years and it was good to be able to spend some time with him.


That Friday evening I had dinner with another long-time friend, Doug "I hate people" Kimme, who is now a police officer in Champaign, IL. Doug and I used to shoot competitively together back in the 80s. He's way better at it than I and now instructs SWAT teams. Doug lost his only son in Iraq last year and we've been in contact but hadn't been face-to-face in many years. It sure was good to see him.
I also had some time with Sensei Bob Garza, an Aikido and Iaido instructor, whom I have tremendous respect for. He came out with us Saturday night and we had him laughing so much he had tears in his eyes. Those Chicago boys are madmen.

Monday, May 11, 2009

You karate junkies

Our own Steve White met Goju-Ryu karate master Chuck Merriman over the weekend. Mr. Merriman is one of the best-known karate practitioners in the US. Steve called me immediately afterward because he was excited, telling me that when he told him who he trained with, Hanshi Merriman knew exactly who I was, where I was from and where I now live. Mr. Merriman is known as one of the most knowledgeable karate instructors in the world. One facet is the bunkai of kata, the interpretation and application of the movements. They have an ongoing research project into it and the website here is worth a look if you are interested in such things.

Why would you be? If you like forms, its interesting to se how they apply their movements. If you want to be able to competently judge forms at tournaments, it's handy. And if you run into one of them, you'd like to know what they might do (to you). There's a clip on the home page that shows some applications that look very Kenpo-like. Not a surprise because high level karate works like Kenpo in many instances. http://www.tairabunkai.com/

Saturday, May 9, 2009

The doctor is in

Forwarded by Marc Rowe. I wonder if the author read Malcolm Gladwell's book, Outliers, when he wrote about a 10,000 hour mark for mastery.



New York Times editorial: Slow practice may be the stuff of genius.

May 1, 2009Op-Ed Columnist

Genius: The Modern View By DAVID BROOKS

Some people live in romantic ages. They tend to believe that genius is the product of a divine spark. They believe that there have been, throughout the ages, certain paragons of greatness — Dante, Mozart, Einstein — whose talents far exceeded normal comprehension, who had an other-worldly access to transcendent truth, and who are best approached with reverential awe.We, of course, live in a scientific age, and modern research pierces hocus-pocus. In the view that is now dominant, even Mozart’s early abilities were not the product of some innate spiritual gift. His early compositions were nothing special. They were pastiches of other people’s work. Mozart was a good musician at an early age, but he would not stand out among today’s top child-performers.What Mozart had, we now believe, was the same thing Tiger Woods had — the ability to focus for long periods of time and a father intent on improving his skills. Mozart played a lot of piano at a very young age, so he got his 10,000 hours of practice in early and then he built from there.The latest research suggests a more prosaic, democratic, even puritanical view of the world. The key factor separating geniuses from the merely accomplished is not a divine spark. It’s not I.Q., a generally bad predictor of success, even in realms like chess. Instead, it’s deliberate practice. Top performers spend more hours (many more hours) rigorously practicing their craft.The recent research has been conducted by people like K. Anders Ericsson, the late Benjamin Bloom and others. It’s been summarized in two enjoyable new books: “The Talent Code” by Daniel Coyle; and “Talent Is Overrated” by Geoff Colvin.If you wanted to picture how a typical genius might develop, you’d take a girl who possessed a slightly above average verbal ability. It wouldn’t have to be a big talent, just enough so that she might gain some sense of distinction. Then you would want her to meet, say, a novelist, who coincidentally shared some similar biographical traits. Maybe the writer was from the same town, had the same ethnic background, or, shared the same birthday — anything to create a sense of affinity.This contact would give the girl a vision of her future self. It would, Coyle emphasizes, give her a glimpse of an enchanted circle she might someday join. It would also help if one of her parents died when she was 12, infusing her with a profound sense of insecurity and fueling a desperate need for success.Armed with this ambition, she would read novels and literary biographies without end. This would give her a core knowledge of her field. She’d be able to chunk Victorian novelists into one group, Magical Realists in another group and Renaissance poets into another. This ability to place information into patterns, or chunks, vastly improves memory skills. She’d be able to see new writing in deeper ways and quickly perceive its inner workings.Then she would practice writing. Her practice would be slow, painstaking and error-focused. According to Colvin, Ben Franklin would take essays from The Spectator magazine and translate them into verse. Then he’d translate his verse back into prose and examine, sentence by sentence, where his essay was inferior to The Spectator’s original.Coyle describes a tennis academy in Russia where they enact rallies without a ball. The aim is to focus meticulously on technique. (Try to slow down your golf swing so it takes 90 seconds to finish. See how many errors you detect.)By practicing in this way, performers delay the automatizing process. The mind wants to turn deliberate, newly learned skills into unconscious, automatically performed skills. But the mind is sloppy and will settle for good enough. By practicing slowly, by breaking skills down into tiny parts and repeating, the strenuous student forces the brain to internalize a better pattern of performance. Then our young writer would find a mentor who would provide a constant stream of feedback, viewing her performance from the outside, correcting the smallest errors, pushing her to take on tougher challenges. By now she is redoing problems — how do I get characters into a room — dozens and dozens of times. She is ingraining habits of thought she can call upon in order to understand or solve future problems.The primary trait she possesses is not some mysterious genius. It’s the ability to develop a deliberate, strenuous and boring practice routine.Coyle and Colvin describe dozens of experiments fleshing out this process. This research takes some of the magic out of great achievement. But it underlines a fact that is often neglected. Public discussion is smitten by genetics and what we’re “hard-wired” to do. And it’s true that genes place a leash on our capacities. But the brain is also phenomenally plastic. We construct ourselves through behavior. As Coyle observes, it’s not who you are, it’s what you do.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

California trip



Jan and I went out to California a few weeks ago, down to the Monterey/Big Sur area, then to Fresno. Graham and Jaydean Lelliott spent two days in Carmel with us. We visited Monterey and drove down along the coast through Big Sur with them. They are such great hosts and fun to hang with, although, as you can see from the picture, Jay gets lonely sometimes.

The scenery along the coast is all it's advertised to be and the weather overall was good.
I taught a seminar at Graham's studio on Saturday. Sunday we went to the Clovis rodeo, one of the big ones on the professional circuit. I hadn't been to one since I was a kid. It was very entertaining and I have to say those boys are crazy.
Graham and Jaydean are running the Wonder Valley kenpo camp on Memorial Day weekend. Make it if you can.

Monday, May 4, 2009

The "My Three Sons" camp


The New England camp was a huge hit! Mr. Bill Gaudette coordinated it and says over 80 people from ten states and four countries were represented by attendees.

Friday evening started off with classes by Marc Sigle from Germany, Jim Peacock from New Hampshire, Graham Lelliott from California and Gary Ellis from England. The Saturday classes were kicked off by Mr. Lelliott, followed by Mr. White. After lunch Mr. Ellis taught and I finished the day. The teaching order was by the seniority of the instructors, determined by when they were last promoted by me. The order remains but the ranks are now one higher, as I moved them all up to eighth. All of them had spent 5-6 years at the last level and had been continuously teaching and promoting the art. Between them, they have almost 90 years of experience as black belts, and more if you count the years prior to their achieving their first degree.

On hand during the ceremony was Richie Bernard, 10th dan in Goju-Ryu. He was responsible for getting the custom-made belts for Lelliott and Ellis.

The feedback on the camp is that everyone had a great time, learned a lot and were blown away to be there for the triple promotion. It was quite a sight to see the crowd reaction when I surprised them and how a sea of people moved forward to congratulate them. It is a bit of kenpo history.

It was Graham Lelliott's first trip to that part of New England and his first meeting with Steve White. It had been some time since he'd seen his old friend Gary Ellis, too, which made the event that much more special.

Mr. White has indicated that the camp may be held again next year and alternate with Graham's Wonder Valley camp. We'll keep you posted.